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$10,000 DOWRES « FORTHO GIRLS AS THEY WED TODAY Valparaiso Merchant Gives Fortunes With Daughters at Double Ceremony. ALL TO LIVE IN CHILI z One of Bridegrooms Said to Be a $10-a-Week Clerk in South Norwalk. ease do not say anything about y, @ar dowries!" exclaimed pretty Senorits >» tela Chinchilla to-day as she spread @ut her wrdding dress. ‘The smiling bride, who is still in her Qeens and with her sister Irene is to figure in a double wedding this afternoon, “; the climax of two Pan-American ro- Mances, had been asked about the $100,000 dower which the father, a Wealthy merchant and nnd owner, of Valparaino, is to give each of his daugh- fers. She admitted the handsome wed- but shook her hi d; “the dower is That ts a custom of our peo- le, you know. It has no part in our happiness, and, oh, we are so happy.” Thore was certainly no question about @hat. It was written all over the face Of the handsome Senorita Irene, who, @s 'f by way of giving it extra em- phasis, sald, “Both our husbands are goming out home wits us after our Roneymoon and will join father in his business. Won't that be lovely?” The double wedding takes place at 4 e'clock at the Church of Our Lady of Victory, Brooklyn, the Rev. Father ‘Wood tying the dual knot. Senor Chin- chilla and his family «re staying tem- 4) (Dorarily at No. 1287 Bergen street, that Dorough. *“\ONE OF BRIDEGROOMS SAIC TO BE $iO0A-WEEK CLERK. The bridgerooms are Clarence Burr Byxbee of Sout Norwalk, Conn., whose ride is Senorita Stella, and Carlos Ham- ‘Mersiee, a Valparaisan here in the pro- ¢:: business, whose bride is the young- Mothing. er sister, Senorita Irene. It is sald Byxbee ia a ten-dolar-a-week clerk in the employ of the Metropolitan Life In- urance Company at South Norwatk. ‘8 snail income’. Two years ago Senor Chinchilla came with his three daughters, Stella, Irene and Blanca, for a pleasure trip in this “gount*y and to see his son, Pelayo, a ‘Btudent in the SheMeld Scientific School at Yalo. In the course of their tour the family stayed some time in Boston, and At was there and then that Senorita '# romance had its beginning. Mise becaine interested in New Thougat and one night attended a lecture at the Metaphysical Club. A kindred thirst for w thoughts happened to have taken yabee to the ledture, and the young couple were Introduced, It was not long before they found that that New @hought meeting had given both of them the oldest thought in the world. ‘The romance of the younger Irene is @auch older. She has known Senor Ham- Merslee since she was twelve years old. He came here onty recently from Chili, Bartly for pleasure and partly for bust- fess, and remained. @ATHER WILL SIGN AGREEMENT GIVING $100,000 TO EACH. The bridesmaids at the double cere- ony will be Miss Alice Kissam and [“Benorita Blanca Chinchilla, who will act porer both #, The best men will be the brother, Pelayo Chinchilla, and his elassmate, Edward Wilson, Yale, 19 @enor Chinchilla wil give his daughters (way. Preweasly to that he signg the ‘ecep-vtial agreements giving each of the brides $100,000, Immediately following the wedding or at 1287 Bergen street the two eung couples leave for @ honeymoon t Niagara ialls. Afterward they will In Senor Chinchilla and Senorita lanca and all will go to Europe then to ile, Before sailing Mr. and Mra, Byx- dee will go to South Norwalk to enable @dr. Byxbee to close up his affairs there Wefore entering upon his career in Senor Ohinchilla’s business. "AH three of the young Valparaisan “girls. They say they are charmed wita gnerica and Americana. And what about Senorita Blanca? fal she look for an American husband the brides were asked. YOh, Blanca jx still at school,” they { ‘ughingly replied. “She will have to fait yet.” Saaaeeeaainnenaseaee soe ORDER EL-BART DRY GIN, © Wee Best isrand of the Best Summer Drink 7 vg ” “Easy Money "It's not difficult to make money and plenty of it QUICKLY— EASILY— SURELY— LEGITIMATELY— by seeing to it that your saved dollars do a “man’s work,” as you can if you Invest them in Vaiue Increasing Real Estate, A Paying Business Enterpri Wisely Purchased Stocks or Bonds World readers have hundreds of op- portunities to so invest their cavings every day. 11,869 World “Real Estate,” “Business Oppor- tunity” and “Financial” ads, last week, 4,519 More than the Herald _Don't iniss the Over 7,000 World Ads. Next Sunday cen A ESR Ra A NS ‘The tanuly deny this but say he has! | Window Smashin | When Parliament E “an g 100 Mild to Win Suffrage xpects Sword and Flame —_—— Winifred Mayo, Mrs. Pankhurst’s Right Hand Woman, Says! Cabinet Minister Has Incited Them to Com- mit Deeds of Greater Violence. | WHAT MRS. LEIGH | ENDURED IN PRISON When She Went ona Hun- | ger Strike the Doctors Took Her Forcibly in Hand and with a Long Tube Fed Her Through the Nostrils. BY SOPHIE IRENE LOEB. (Special Correnpon ace of The Brening World. LONDON, England, Aug. %—"T un- dertake to abstain from making any | |interrup¥on or disturbance maintenance of or- der in the Ner- te | This ts the agree- ment T had to signy before being al lowed to enter the women's gallery in the House of Com- mons, and I had to by Introduced by a member of Parlia- | ment, who fs re- sponsible for me. Mr. Asquith was for me as Maurice Bonham “responaible’ Carter, secretary to the Prime Minister, Each of These Brides Gets $1 00, 000, Father's Gift on Their Wedding Day escorted me there, ‘The House of Commons was hardly in- handcuffs were removed at midnight on Thursday by the matron’s orders, still refrained from food. About noon on Saturday I was told the matron wished to speak to me, and was taken! to the doctor's room, where I saw the matron, «ight wardressea and two doc: tors. There et on the floor and an arm chair on it. The doctor id, | tended for women. The space allotted to the fair sex is not much larger than two or three of our theatre boxes put tomether. Closely woven {ron railings separate the visitors from the speakers, and I wondered how women could do much damage through these. But history records how one young woman brought secreted chains to the gallery, bound herself to the gr locked the padlock in the chi 4 I was to sit down and I ak He then said: ‘You must listen care-| fully to what IT have to say. I have orders from officers (he had a blue off! in his hand | put the key down her back. to which he referred) ‘that you axe not proceeded to make @ suffrage speech. | to be released, even on medical grounds, | As they could not drag her off she went] If you stfll refrain from food, 1 must| on at the top of her voice and the en-| ‘ake other ineusures to compel you to} tire grating had to be removed to get] MNP a ot retune, her awa; force food on me, T want So I went to the “Votes for Women"| vou are going te do it.’ headquarters and asked “Why are you] “He said: ‘That 1s @ matter for me so militant? Where ts the gal ? to decide.’ Mrs. Winifred Mayo, imprisoned « TOLD DOCTOR HE MUST PROVE eral times, and who is Mrs. Pankhurst's HER TO BE INSANE. right-hand woman and in charge of the| “I @aid he must prove that 1 was in- prison affairs, answered: ‘Because the| sane, and the lunacy commissioners of Parliament expect us to be.” | Would have to be Samaiaaaed) to) prove that I was insane, and he could no’ CONSIDERS MILITANT POLICY 18) (rim “an operation without ine pa- COMPARATIVELY MILD. | tlent’s consent, and the feeding by th T asked her to explain, She answered: | tube was an outrage. 1 also” sad “My personal reason for being a mil-| shall hold you responsible, and shall ftant Is In answer to a cabinet min- Ister’s statement—the Right Hon. C. 1. take any measures in order to see whether you are justified in doing so? Hobhouse, who in giving reasons why women should not vote said: ‘We have and if you know how “He merely bowed and said: ‘Those @re my orders.’ “I was then surrounded and forced not had in the case of the woman back on the chair, which was tilted suffrage demands the kind of popular nackward. Thore were about ten of jentimental uprising which accounted | them, The doctor then forced my mouth for Nottingham Castle in 18% or Hyde Park Rallings in 187.' Do you know what happened to Nottingham Castle? There was 4 great agitation for the Re- form bill, which was blocked by the House of Lords. So the men who want- ed votes burnt Nottingham Castle, the seat of the Duke of Nowcastle, to the | saturday afternoon the wardress ground, They also burnt Colwick Cas-| forced me.on the bed and the two do tle. In Bristol in a single night, pri- | tors came in with them, and while I Vate as well as public property to the) was held down @ nasal tube was in- Value of £10,000 was destroyed. serted, It ds two yards long, with a ‘These are the deeds which Mr. Hob- funnel at the soe tere is cane ite at tion in the middle to see !f the lau bows, py cabieey eran 6 Se | Is passing, The end is put up one nostril | i one day, and up the other nostril the taken hig advice, they have adopted a| Mscat wale, ts pupmeisneen Galer | next. Dolley of window breaking, which 18! the process, both mental and physi 80 as to form a pune! while one of the aniresses poured some liquid from a spoon; it was milk and brandy, After giving me what he | thought suffictent, he sprinkled me with eau de cologne, and wardresses then escorted me to another cell on the first floor, where I remained two days. On . and held me mildneas itself compared with what Mr. | One doctor inserted the end up Hobhouse expects them to do.” | nostril white I was held down by th 1 asked whether she deemed the re-| wardresses, during which they must have seen iny pain, for the other doctor interfered (the matnon and two of the wardresses in tears), and they stopped and resorted to feeding me the spoon, as in the morning. More de cologne was used. The food was milk, Iwas then put to bed in the cell, which is a punishment cell on the first floor. The doctor felt my pulse and asked me to take food each time, but I refused. “On Sunday he came in and tmplored me to be amenable and have food in the proper way. I still refused, I was fed by the spoon up to Saturday, three times a day. From four to five ward-| ing whe cent throwing of hatchets and bi of @ theatre In Dublin “mildness. answered: “3t has gone beyond the stage of mildmess and just window smashing. Given fi years penal servi- ‘tude, will go om a hunger strike and en- Gure forcible feeding—endure anything. “But how will that help the cause?’ 1 asked, “The reports of the torture endured to make them eat rouse otheré to the indignities heaped on women and gain sympathy for the cause," she answered, We don't mind being prisoners or|resses and the two doctors were present treated as prisoners, but we want to be|on each occasion. time the same} treated as political prisoners the same] doctor forced my mouth. ‘The other 4s men and not as common criminals.! doctor assisted and held my, nose on “But when you presume on porsona!| nearly every occasion. On Monday 1 | was taken to a hospital cell, where I was fed by a spoon in similar fashion. On Tuesday a feeding was used for the first time, and Benger's food poured into my mouth for breakfast and sup- |per, and beef tea midday property and make havoc are you not common criminals?" I questioned, “Mo,” answered Miss Mayo emphati- cally, “We are doing in ® very mild what the men had to y ote... conducted her own cause. FIVE ARE HURT WHEN ALTO HTS TELEGRAPH POLE Car Crossing City Island Bridge Crashed Head-On and Is Wrecked. One young woman and four me injured early to-day in the wreck of o automobile which smashed into a tele- @ sense of great pain in the diaphragm or breast bone, in the nose and the ears. The tube must below the breast bone, though I “Twas Vv after the tu T have 1am fed in this way very “This is what through with in “Also her Mrs, Li Dublin, other tl go id Misa two compan- should think from her account she would be glad to take food in the nat- ural way,’ [ suggested. “But the natural way does not get us anything. Our laws do not admit prisoner to starve, and they must re- lease you If you are too weak to sta or else feed you tin the only way And there you have the reason for the militant! conducted he - hy) speech SENSATION SO PAINFUL THAT @ Court was a hero! | IT MADE HER ILL. e Meg hig: nepitmenint | ‘The sensation is most painful—the} Mrs. Mary Leigh's acaount of her|4'ums of the ear seem to be a horrible pain in the throat former suffering for the cause and she ihe tube ia pustiea a0w will go through the same procedure in Ireland.”” | breast. inches. inned ardresses, one doctor STORY OF MRS. LEIGH'S EX- [ti holding the funnel PERIENCE IN PRISON, at arm's so as to ha the) The account read: “On my arrival at | funnel end the level, and then Winson Green on Wednesday afternoon, | the other doctor, who is behind, forces 1 protested against the treatment to| the other end up the nostril which I was subjected, and bri the} ‘The one holding the funnel end pours! windows in my cell. Accordingly at 9 o'clock in the evening I was taken to the punishment cell, a cold dark room on the ground floor—light only shines on very bright days; no furniture in dt. A plank bed was brought in, 1 was then stripped and handecut with my hands behind during the day, except at meals, When the palms were niaced together in The front. At night, they were Also placed in front with the palms out. On Thurs- day, food was brought into the ceil: potators, bread and gruei—ut I dld nor touch {t “Thursday afternoon the visiting mag- {strates came, I waa taken before them handcuffed, After hearing what 1 h to say, they sentenced me to nine ai close confinement with bread and water, and to lose forty-two days’ remission , Marke ong pay $105 damages, The T Ww. W.— T. R.—W.H. T. T that pleases all Partie; LIPTON’S TEA were without 4 | fterwards ar- -one years old, 1051 Stebbins and bruised, w rotN } cut Attended bY an ambulance surgeon and Bronx Nestor, rea t One skull taken estate Hundred soured to Ford Hoxpi Clifford Lee ho str u | | taken to! ; wi te broker, of N » the Bronx; eut d by an ambu. id sent hon lian Hart, tunnel inspector, of No, rant avenue, the Bronx; attended an ambulance surgeon and tak. | 95 ay en ne car Was crossing the City 1 Bridge at ® high rate of speed when it struck w pile of stevel rails, skidded w Kot out of control of the driver, f fore he could shut off the power ti. heavily laden auto had shot down of graph pole alongside the City Island jthe bridge incline and crashed bh “on Bridge. Into a telegraph pole, "The car was operated by Harry Ceves| The first report of the accident was received at the City Island police stuc land, twenty-neven years old, of No. ae ‘ ; tion @ little before & o'clock. By the | 1068 Southern Houlevard, who owns the] tie “several precinct ten arrived car with C. E. Keator of No. 1204 Dean the scene an ambulance had t et, Brooklyn. Cleveland escaped | moned from Fordham Hospital, ;. ulance had been summo: t by the a the liquid down; about a pint of milky} members of another automobile party sometimes egg and milk a used, Mn} that came along just after the crash, the glass junction shows the fluld has/ The men and women in thix car did gone down a signal ix given, a basin] what they could to relleve the distress of warm water ts put under my chin] of the injured. Cleveland remained by and the other doctor withdraws the} nis aur until the police arrived and then tube and plunges the end into the water. | explained the accident. Ho. said Before and after use they test my heart! there was no lght on the | ste and make @ lot of exainination, 'The| mark the pile of rails and t haa after effects are a fecling of faintness,| hy idew of Its presence on. t bridge until he hit it eveland and his partner have a cab stand at One Hundred and Porty-ninth | street and Third avenue. | The wutomodiie purty was on ts] way to the Harlem Yacht Club at City | Island, re the Necor, all auxii-| lary yacht alae | moored, The ya Nestor by the late 1 eld by Magistrate Krotel in ter Court without ball on @ charge of reckless driving and assault Dr, Gillette of Fordham Hospital, re ported to the Magistrate that Nestor, who if employed in the Burton Thomp: son real estate office at 1 Wal treet as manager, could not pox Hrecover and might die at any mor bly nit A new Sugar that takes the place of both powdered and old- fashioned Granulated Sugars IN GERM-PROOF PACKAGES 0. No flies—-no dust From the time we receive the raw product until it reaches youin hermetically scaled packages [£3] no hand touches the Sugar, Perfect purity and Net Weight Guaranteed Soldin 2 Ib., 33% Ib. and 5 lb, Sealed Packages THE AMERICAN SUGAR REFINING COMPANY AddressNew York City broker, 37 Bast One Huns | 1 contu 1012, OTHER AND Si PERSH AS SE TRES 10 REST | Trapped in Bedroom of Their Home While Neighbors Des- perately Try to Save Them. Mrs. Rosa Barbaro of her} | seven children were kc! fire in | thelr home at Kin a J, eleht | miles out of Hoboken, daylight | |to-day. Her husvand, Koto, who had} bakery und the living apart aped by leaping a wine | dow, thrusting urteen-year-old son Joaeph out b im. | The had filled the room In which the mother and six younger children Were sleeping before the baker awoki w er wife and} dadtes had ehind Barbaro | fought vainly to break into the house to no to thelr rescue, Noighbors, roused by tho glare and the crackling of the! found Mim temporarily orm mother and the five children we when the fire Nn reached them. Barbaro, holding the five-montha+ okt baby in her ar lay in her ntaht- | dress very near a rear window. A few steps more and she could have found ™ ty. The bodies a the four older Jehtidren were discovered, only partly | clothed, in a tangled heap near the head of the stairs, where they had been overcome by smoke. Barbaro is a master baker, employing @ number of men. The family occupied rooms above the bakeshop, Mra, Bar: | six children sleeping in the ) and Barbaro using the front room with the boy Joseph NEIGHBORHOOD AWAKENED By MAN'S SCREAMS. A few minutes after 1 o'clock the neighborhood was aroused by frantic creas from the Barbaro house. Pos |iceman Ringwood and @ companion rushed to the scene to find Barbaro in s window, shouting and praying for help. 1 had already gained consider back of the house, could be seen behind ned from the window, the boy Joseph in his ar With a jas t, Barbaro yelled that his wife | en were being burned to deat crying for some one to cateh he the boy, halt | | was found impos | the bedroom, At t rat the depart and were focused on thay dwelling, but without suc. jeoss. Effort after |Rarbaro and the children from every point of approach was rendered futile by the Names and smoke, MAY HAVE DIED BEFORE ALARM WAS GIVEN, se Was om! fort to get to Mr The he for the ix belleved and probably lthe ¢ were asphyxiated even be. fore ‘8 first Agonized cries were o's condition was plttable when le brought out by the Chief of t tants. He aved and hysteria, Hition finally became so alarm | ing he was turned over to D; Clark, @ private practitioner, who was obliged to quiet him with powerful ives and leave him in the station he could be under the eve lor Discouraged About Your Complexion? the p face OF LONE, Dr. James P. Campbell’s Safe Arsenic Complexion Wafers RICHARD Dept. W. 415 Broadw New York City to everyone, and that is one reason wh Send ten cents in atainpe fur sample box strong: f ‘T'yree's Anti- 'yree’s Antiseptic Pow should commend itself, therefore, to every household. Unequalled as a jdouche. A 25 cent package makes two | Hallons of standard solu Sold by | druggists eve Send for booklet and sample. Chemist, NLY Safest Antiseptic Washingtor Harlem Furniture Broadway at 34th Street Continuing today and concluding tomorrow the final sale of Saks Suits for Men Were 35.00 to 48.00....now 24.00 Were 25.00 to 30.00....now 17.50 Were 20.00 & 23.00....now 13.50 Were 15.00 & 17.50....now 10.00 Linen Suits ................were 7.50... Outing Trousers............were 4.00.... +. now 4.50 now 2.50 @ These assortments are composed of two and three piece models. The fabrics include every mixture cloth in stock. Some sizes are missing at some prices, but all sizes are available in the assortments asa whole. Beginning and including tomorrow, Aug. 3lst, this store will be open Saturdays until 6 o'clock P. M. as usual. BROOKLYN Flatbush and Dekalb Aves. 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